In current low dose rate brachytherapy practice, dose evaluation within the prostate is govern by the protocol defined by the task group 43 (TG-43) of the American Association of Physicist in Medicine. This task group assumes a homogeneous water based patient with invariable density. They also disregard the changes in photon attenuation through neighbouring brachytherapy sources. With the introduction of these simplifications, dose calculations are easily solved using an equation proposed in this protocol. Although this task group helped create a uniform practice of brachytherapy treatments between hospitals, it does not properly described the actual dose distribution within the patient. The current publication of TG-186 gives recommendations to study these dose distribution more realistically.
The purpose of this Master's thesis is to apply these recommendations from TG-186 to obtain a more realistic description of the dose. In order to proceed, two sets of patient images are acquired with a dual energy computed tomography (DECT). These images are corrected for metallic artifacts, which are highly present in the scanned images, using DECT metallic artifact reduction algortithm, developped in this work. Afterwords, a Monte Carlo study can be performed by properly identifying the environment with human tissues. This segmentation is performed by evaluating the effective atomic number and electronic density of each voxel using a DECT stoichiometric calibration, and allocating the tissue having the closest resemblance to these physical parameters. The results show clear differences in dose distribution when comparing TG-43 protocole with TG-186 recommendations.